Diabetes Distress Among Dyads of Patients and Their Health Supporters: Links With Functional Support, Metabolic Outcomes, and Cardiac Risk

Author:

Lee Aaron A1ORCID,Heisler Michele234,Trivedi Ranak56,Obrosky D Scott78,Mor Maria K7,Piette John D23,Rosland Ann-Marie78

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, University of Mississippi, MS

2. VA Center for Clinical Management Research, Ann Arbor, MI

3. Department of Health Behavior and Health Education, University of Michigan School of Public Health, Ann Arbor, MI

4. Department of Internal Medicine, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, MI

5. VA Center for Innovation to Implementation, VA Palo Alto Health Care System, Palo Alto, CA

6. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Division of Population Sciences and Public Mental Health, Stanford University, Stanford, CA

7. VA Center for Health Equity Research and Promotion, Pittsburgh, PA

8. Department of Internal Medicine, University of Pittsburgh Medical School, Pittsburgh, PA

Abstract

Abstract Background Patients with diabetes (PWD) often experience diabetes distress which is associated with worse self-management and glycemic control. In contrast, PWD who receive support from family and friends (supporters) have better diabetes outcomes. Purpose To examine the associations of PWD diabetes distress and supporters’ distress about PWDs’ diabetes with supporters’ roles and PWD cardiometabolic outcomes. Methods We used baseline data from 239 adults with Type 2 diabetes and their supporters participating in a longitudinal trial. PWD and supporter diabetes distress (high vs. low) were determined using the Problem Areas in Diabetes Scale-5. Outcomes included PWD-reported help from supporters with self-care activities, supporter-reported strain, PWD metabolic outcomes (glycemic control [HbA1c], systolic blood pressure [SBP], and non-HDL cholesterol) and 5 and 10 year risk of cardiac event (calculated using the United Kingdom Prospective Diabetes Study algorithm). Results PWDs with high diabetes distress were more likely to report that their supporters helped with taking medications, coordinating medical care, and home glucose testing (p’s < .05), but not more likely to report help with diet or exercise. High supporter distress was associated with greater supporter strain (p < .001). High supporter diabetes distress was associated with higher PWD HbA1c (p = .045), non-HDL cholesterol (p = .011), and 5 (p = .002) and 10 year (p = .001) cardiac risk. Conclusions Adults with high diabetes distress report more supporter help with medically focused self-management but not with diet and exercise. Supporter distress about PWD diabetes was consistently associated with worse outcomes. PWD diabetes distress had mixed associations with their diabetes outcomes.

Funder

VA HSR&D IIR14-074

Michigan Center for Diabetes Translational Research

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,General Psychology

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